Harrison Construction Co. v. Greystone Hotel Co.

127 S.E. 641, 99 W. Va. 5, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 100
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1925
DocketC. C. 346
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 127 S.E. 641 (Harrison Construction Co. v. Greystone Hotel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison Construction Co. v. Greystone Hotel Co., 127 S.E. 641, 99 W. Va. 5, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 100 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Hatcher, Judge:

The plaintiff brought suit in the Circuit Court of Green-brier County to enforce a builder’s lien against real estate owned by the defendant. A demurrer to the plaintiff’s bill was sustained. The circuit court, on its own motion, eerti- *6 fied here for our decision, the question arising on the sufficiency of the affidavit to the notice of the plaintiff’s lien.

The notice is in the exact form prescribed in paragraph b of section 3 of chapter 75 of the Code. It is signed “Harrison Construction Company, Incorporated, By L. B. Perrin, Supt.” The affidavit to the notice is also in the statutory form. It is as follows:

“L. B. Perrin, being first duly sworn, upon his oath says that the statements contained in the foregoing notice of lien are true, as he verily believes. ’ ’

The circuit court took the view that the affidavit was fatally defective because it did not show that Mr. Perrin was expressly authorized to make it.

It is contended for the demurrant that the duties of a superintendent of a corporation are closely circumscribed by custom and law, and do not include the making of an affidavit for his company or other such “administrative duties.” The case of Napier v. Mozena Coal Company, 86 W. Va. 220, is cited. In that case, it was held that the power of a superintendent was not restricted to acts within the express scope of his authority, but included such other acts as by implication were reasonably necessary to effectuate the results authorized, in the usual and customary manner. The principle underlying this holding opposes, rather than supports the demurrant’s contention. If a superintendent has the implied power therein stated in relation to contractual matters, a fortiori, should he have the implied power to render a service, entirely beneficial to his company and designed to protect it from loss, in a matter where no contractual rights are involved.

The demurrant also relies on the case of Quesenberry v. Loan Association, 44 W. Va. 512. That case denied the right of an attorney therein to make an affidavit for the defendant corporation. The decision, however, was not based on the fact that an attorney, as a representative of the corporation, could not properly make an affidavit for it. The affidavit therein was quashed because there was nothing, to show or import that the attorney was conversant with the facts contained in the affidavit. The opinion of the court, in part, is as follows:

*7 “The affidavit offered by defendant was not made by any officer of the corporation who might be expected to know anything of the indebtedness between the parties. It seems to be the law that, where a pleading of a corporation is to be sworn to, it must be by the president or some officer conversant with the facts. This affidavit was made by the attorney at law of the defendant. What would he know of the indebtedness, unless he would show that he was personally cognizant of the facts? Doubtless there are instances in which an attorney may make affidavit for a corporation; but this is an instance where the affidavit calls for personal knowledge of the facts, — the account between the parties, — if any instance does.”

The gist of this holding is that the official title of the one making the affidavit is immaterial provided he bet conversant with the facts. Apply that principle to the Perrin affidavit. Being an artificial person, the plaintiff, of necessity, acts through its officers and agents. A superintendent in charge of its work is recognized as a regular and important part of its corporate machinery. He is the representative of the corporation on the jot. He is the one who keeps in touch with the work performed. No officer or agent of the corporation would ordinarily know more about the local situation than the superintendent. He is the officer most likely to know the desirability or the necessity of taking the lien permitted by the statute. It is his duty to act promptly in case of emergency to safeguard, as far as may be, the interests of his employer. No reason appears why a superintendent, when conversant with the facts, is not a proper official to make an affidavit for the corporation] The notice states that Mr. Perrin was the superintendent of the plaintiff. The affidavit is attached to and is a part of the notice. It was therefore not necessary to repeat in- the affidavit his official connection with the company.

The demurrant also argues that Mr. Perrin is not an officer of the corporation, but its agent. His right as an agent to perfect the lien in question is not denied, but demurrant contends that his authorization as such agent should appear i/n the affidavit. We know of no better answer to this contention than *8 is found in tbe faultless logic of Judge Dill of the New Jersey court in the case of American Soda Fountain Company v. Stolzenbach, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 703, 68 Atl. 1078. That was a case involving the validity of an affidavit made on behalf of a corporation by its vice-president. It was there held that the affidavit of the officer was, in legal contemplation, the affidavit of the corporation; that he was prima facie acting properly and by authority of the corporation, and that special allegation of his authority in the affidavit was unnecessary. We quote with approval from the opinion:

“The fallacy of the argument of the defendant in error is that it fails to note the distinction between a corporate act, performed through the intermediation of a person specially empowered to act as its agent or its attorney, and a like act done immediately by the corporation through its own administrative officers — its inherent agencies. The right of an artificial person to empower and employ agents or attorneys is identical with that of a natural person, — each is governed alike by the law of principal and agent. The fundamental difference between the natural and artificial person is that the latter, even when not acting as a principal through the intermediation of an agent, acts through some agency, inherent in its corporate form. Normally, such agency inheres in the natural persons who hold and administer the offices of the corporation. The analogy of a natural body having head and members holds good in the case of the artificial body, the common and declared law recognizing that the officers are the means — the hands, the head, by which corporations normally act. * * * Hence, when a corporation does not go outside of its corporate machinery and capacity in doing a corporate act, it is a confusion of terms and of ideas to say that it is acting through an agent when the fact is that it is acting through an agency, and in chief. The distinction is not merely verbal and hence trivial, but, on the contrary, marks the wide difference that exists between acting for oneself by an inherent faculty and the employment of another person to act for one in one’s stead.”

*9 The New Jersey decision is supported by the Canadian court in Bank of Toronto v. McDougall, 15 U. C. C. P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.E. 641, 99 W. Va. 5, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-construction-co-v-greystone-hotel-co-wva-1925.